In sprints, the entire field skis over the course in a time trial. The top 30 skiers are broken into five heats of six with the top two skiers in each heat advancing; then two heats of five skiers, and finally the final foursome.

‘Getting through that first heat of six has been something we’ve had to practice a little bit. You need different tactics in the heat of six than a heat of four. Today, it worked out for us’ said Newell, a Stratton Mountain School graduate who, as a junior, was ranked No. 1 worldwide among junior sprinters.

After rain Saturday, and snow during the night, conditions were tricky for waxing and skiing, according to Newell. ‘Tracks got glazed – they stayed firm but they were glazed and our wax guys did a sweet job at finding skis because it was changing conditions all the way through to the final heat.’

Coach Trond Nystad said the key was a strong qualifying time – Koos was second, Newell fourth – and the experience they have picked up in sprints during the last month. ‘Andy was maybe a centimeter from beating Rotchev, but that’s not too bad, considering you lose to the current world champion in sprints’ he said.

‘The guys have been getting better every sprint, every race,” Nystad added. “We know they have the speed – they show that in every prologue [time trial] … and now they’re building that experience in learning good tactics of racing in a pack’ he added. ‘It’s so important to be patient, and stick to the plan.

‘Andy and Torin are making steps forward every day. This was not a fluke result. If Andy were skiing for second or third place, he probably would have finished second or third’ Nystad said, ‘but he was skiing to win, and you can lose big or you can win big. I think that’s the right attitude for the victory. There’s no sense going for second place, especially when it’s your first final. Make it memorable.’

Ella Gjoemle made it a sprints sweep for Norway, edging Sweden’s Lina Andersson, with Guro Stroem Solli, another Norwegian, in third place and Poland’s Justyna Kowalczyk completing the final foursome among the women.

The World Cup takes a two-week break before regrouping Feb. 4-5 in Davos, Switzerland, for final tuneup races before the Olympics Feb. 10-26 in Torino, Italy.